Both are headed to next week's All-Star game along with
teammates Jonathan Papelbon, who struck out the side in the
ninth to earn his 21st save in 23 opportunities, and Tim
Wakefield, who pitches the series finale on Wednesday night.

"Obviously I blew it in April," said Beckett (10-3), "but I feel
like I've had a good couple of months, really getting back on
track."

His ERA was 7.22 at the end of April but 3.62 now. On Tuesday,
he gave up two runs, six hits and a walk with four strikeouts in
6 2-3 innings.

"He's one of the best," Boston manager Terry Francona said.
"He's fearless. Our guys look up to him. I think he enjoys that
responsibility."

Beckett improved to 5-0 in his eight Fenway Park starts this
year.

"I love pitching here," he said. "It's awesome to pitch in front
of a full house every night."

With Wakefield also at 10-3, the Red Sox are the only team with
two 10-game winners.

Bay, the top vote-getter among AL outfielders for next Tuesday's
All-Star game, had a much better start than Beckett with a .324
batting average through May 10. That fell to .259 by last
Saturday, but Bay is 4-for-8 since then and hit his 20th homer
to tie the game 1-1 in the second inning Tuesday.

"When guys are locked in," he said, "the ball looks like a beach
ball and stuff. And then there's the exact opposite of that
where it looks like an aspirin coming out of a shotgun and
you're really battling up there.

"You know it's not going to last forever."

The Red Sox got nine hits off Dana Eveland (1-3) and four
relievers one night after managing just two hits off rookie
Brett Anderson in his 6-0 complete-game victory. That was the
third loss in four games for the team with the AL's best record
(50-33).

Eveland, recalled from Triple-A Sacramento when Dallas Braden
went on the bereavement list Monday, was designated for
assignment after the game. He allowed four runs and six hits in
2 2-3 innings.

"It wasn't that he had no command," Oakland manager Bob Geren
said. "It was that when he got ahead (in the count) he didn't
keep it."

Scott Hairston broke Beckett's streak of 23 innings at Fenway
without an earned run with a solo homer in the first, two days
after being traded from San Diego, where he hit 10 homers.

"We put some good swings on him, but obviously when he's on he's
on," said Hairston who made his first visit to Fenway since 1984
when he was 4 years old and his father, Jerry, played there for
the Chicago White Sox.

Beckett retired 12 of the next 13 batters after the homer. But
with two outs in the fifth, Ryan Sweeney doubled, Mark Ellis
walked and Adam Kennedy drove in a run that cut Boston's lead to
4-2.

Beckett left in the seventh after Kurt Suzuki reached on third
baseman Kevin Youkilis' error and took second on an infield
single by Ellis. Hideki Okajima ended the threat by retiring
Kennedy on a groundout.

The Red Sox took a 2-1 lead in the second on Bay's homer and a
double-play grounder by Nick Green that scored David Ortiz, who
had doubled and moved to third on the first of Jason Varitek's
two singles.

"I threw a fastball right down the middle when I was trying to
go in on Bay," Eveland said. "I just really missed some spots."

Varitek's second hit drove in two runs in the third. J.D. Drew
led off with a double and took third when Bay reached on a
forceout at second. Bay stole second, Ortiz walked and Varitek
singled.

Boston scored the final run on an RBI single in the sixth by
Dustin Pedroia, who returned to the lineup after missing
Monday's game to be with his pregnant wife, who was hospitalized
after going into labor. Pedroia said Tuesday she was OK.

NOTES: Oakland 1B Jason Giambi went 0 for 4 with three
strikeouts and is 5 for 44 in his last 13 games. ... Boston 1B
Aaron Bates, who made his major league debut Monday night, went
0 for 3 with two strikeouts and is 0 for 6 with four strikeouts
in his two games.